Cool Hunting
With passion as intense as her photos, budding photographer Ashley Jordan Gordon recently caught the attention of London's National Portrait Gallery with her image called, "Girl on Kingsland Road." Shot at an East End music festival (pictured above), the 24-year-old caught the "convergence of the roiling crowd" as well as a fleeting moment of mutual awareness with her subject. The upshot, feeling like a strong, decisive moment, placed her as one of the candidates in the gallery's Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2009 competition and exhibition.
Gordon describes her draw to the pictorial medium as, "very much the same line as staring at my own tears in the mirror. I think I have always been fascinated with how personal experience translates and disseminates itself out into the world, how that is viewed and interpreted as opposed to what we experience internally, and where these meet or diverge away from each other."
A California native, it was only a few short years ago that the now London-based photographer graduated from college in Santa Cruz. Obtaining a degree in Environmental Studies with an emphasis in Documentary Photography, Gordan aims to utilize her talent in a positive way. In her view, "there is a lot of need in the world for exposure to the environmental and humanitarian problems we are facing, and I feel a duty and desire to work toward being able to share this in a way that could perhaps help educate or overcome a viral apathy that our wealth of media and imagery has perhaps contributed to."
Comparing Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley" to her Peeping Tom personality and insatiable curiosity to document people, Gordon's objective way of viewing the world—and herself—lays the path for a life filled with inspiring images. (Click on photos below for enlarged view.)
Check out more images after the jump. To see Ashley Jordan Gordon's entire portfolio, visit her website.
Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2009
National Portrait Gallery
5 November 2009-14 February 2010
Saint Martin’s Place
London WC2H 0HE map
tel. +44 020 7312 2463

|
previous entry Rubber Duck x Joyrich Snowjogger |
next entry WK Interact: How to Blow Yourself Up |
Considering fashion a tool for creating artful images, over the last 30 years Simon Foxton has become one of the industry's most prominent and avant-garde menswear stylists—his body of work now encapsulated in the exhibition "When You're A Boy" at the Photographer's Gallery London. Never concerning himself with trends, but instead gathering inspiration from images found within magazines spanning National Geographic to porn, ironically...
Jeff Bark's newest works are the subject of his solo show, Woodpecker, at the Michael Hoppen Contemporary Gallery in London; it's his second show at the gallery. Bark's newest works are so multilayered it makes my brain hurt—in the best way possible. The photos feel like part diorama, painting and film. His involved process includes constructing a pond-like set that took over a month...
LA-based, Philadelphia-born filmmaker and photographer Larry Yust combines 10 to 100 digital images to create giant "Photographic Elevations" up to eight feet long (pictured below, detail above). Opening 24 September 2009 at the Lumas gallery, this will be Yust’s first show in New York City after solo exhibitions in Los Angeles, Hamburg, Berlin, Cologne and most notably the Louvre. Featuring his infamous photos of...
by Tisha Leung Are you an avid photographer who thinks outside the box's box? Third Ward, Williamsburg's go-to resource for the creative design professional, recently announced their first-ever Open Call for photography. With a goal of finding the best new creative work from emerging photographers, the missive turns to photography's evolution as a catalyst, looking to its development from daguerreotypes to glass negatives and from...
Photographer and CH contributing writer Jonah Samson's photographs of sex-driven miniatures on display at Seattle's G. Gibson Gallery are controversy writ small. Selected from his series "Pleasantville," the photos are part of the group exhibition entitled "View Master," featuring photographers Lori Nix and Grace Weston, who also make use of the creepy realism of dioramas in their work. Where Nix' desolate scenes suggest countless...
by Julie Wolfson A physical exegesis of the album Dark Night of the Soul, controversial filmmaker David Lynch collaborated with the album's creators—Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse—to create a two-room installation at the Michael Kohn Gallery in Los Angeles. The intermingling of the music and photos was no accident. A huge fan of Lynch, Danger Mouse approached the filmmaker about working together on a project. Lynch,...


